Just days before the Michigan High School Girls Swimming & Diving State Championships were scheduled to be held on November 21, a wave of new lockdowns hitting the state has led to the suspension of high school sports.
While professional and “some college” sports are allowed to continue, without spectators, all youth sports will be suspended for 3 weeks, starting Wednesday, by order of Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer. The new restrictions come amid a dramatic spike in new coronavirus cases and Covid-19 hospitalizations in Michigan, and in most states around the country.
“We understand the need for action, and we will explore all options to complete our Fall tournaments when restrictions are lifted,” Executive Director of the MHSAA Mark Uyl said. We will assess everything over the next three weeks relative to Fall and Winter sports and come up with a plan that keeps us connected to our goal, for months, of having three seasons that are played to their conclusions.”
The suspension includes both practices and competitions for the next three weeks, and will impact USA Swimming and Masters clubs as well. While teams must cease organized activities, pools may remain open for individual exercise.
For College and professional sports to be allowed to continue, they must meet “extraordinary standards for risk mitigation.”
“In the spring, we listened to public health experts, stomped the curve, and saved thousands of lives together,” Whitmer said upon announcing the orders. “Now, we must channel that same energy and join forces again to protect our families, frontline workers and small businesses,” said Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. “Right now, there are thousands of cases a day and hundreds of deaths a week in Michigan, and the number is growing. If we don’t act now, thousands more will die, and our hospitals will continue to be overwhelmed. We can get through this together by listening to health experts once again and taking action right now to slow the spread of this deadly virus.”
“Indoor gatherings are the greatest source of spread, and sharply limiting them is our focus,” said MDHHS Director Robert Gordon. “The order is targeted and temporary, but a terrible loss of life will be forever unless we act. By coming together today, we can save thousands of lives.”
Most of the rules from the new emergency order will last for 3 weeks. Among other restrictions:
- Indoor residential gatherings are limited to two households at one time (the state is encouraging families to choose a single other household for a ‘social bubble’)
- Indoor dining at bars and restaurants must stop.
- Casinos, movie theaters, and group exercise classes will be closed.
- Other entertainment venues, like bowling centers, ice skating rinks, and indoor water parks, must also close.
- Colleges and high schools are required to end all in-person classes and move to remote learning.
- Workers must work from home, unless it is impossible to do so (such as manufacturing, construction, etc.)
While the measures are a roll-back from the gradual opening that has taken place since the first peak of cases in mid-April, they won’t be as strict this time around. Among the activities allowed to continue:
- Retail sales
- Small outdoor gatherings, limited to 25 people or fewer
- Two-household gatherings
- Hair salons, barber shops, and other personal services
- Gyms and pools, for individual exercise
- Public transit will continue to operate
- Childcare services
- Funerals (with up to 25 people)
- Parks and outdoor recreation activities remain open
- Kindergarten through 8th grade in-person instruction
Other high school sports, including fall tournaments for girls volleyball and football, have also been suspended.
Other states, including Maine, have severely limited the activities of youth sports in recent weeks, while some, like New York and Minnesota, have instituted new restrictions that won’t directly impact most organized sports leagues, club, high school, college, or otherwise.
In the ‘first wave’ of the coronavirus pandemic in the spring, Michigan peaked at 1,722 new daily cases on April 7. While they were able to gradually reopen businesses through summer without seeing much of a spike, as colder months arrived, and more gatherings moved indoors, cases began to rise dramatically. By mid-October, the state was surpassing its April record almost daily, and the most recent 7 day period has seen an average of almost 6,700 new daily cases.
That has been accompanied by a 144% increase in deaths and 111% increase in hospitalizations over the last two weeks. While new daily deaths are still below where they were in April, averaging about 60 per day over the last week, hospitalizations have returned to higher than 80% of the early-pandemic levels, and continue to rise.
How things have changed and a game like football & tennis without spectators is lackluster. Lets hope everything will be back normal soon and we will be enjoying the crowd full sports activities soon.Read more
I have a feeling that sports around the Midwest, as winter picks up, will follow Michigan’s lead. In the grand scheme of things, 3 weeks isn’t that long and if it saves lives isn’t it ultimately worth it? I don’t think the decision was made out of hate but rather love for the state. I can’t imagine getting that much hate for attempting to do the right thing…
This isn’t spreading in scenarios where people are wearing masks. It’s parties and gatherings outside of school. It’s not going to save lives unless people stop having gatherings. And when people can’t see their friends in school or at practice in a safe environment, they have unsafe gatherings. So this is counterproductive in my opinion
Look at the numbers – the mid-west numbers are already skyrocketing. Rural hospitals, especially in Oklahoma, SD, Wyoming, ND are struggling. A dear friend is a doctor in Tulsa and the hospitals there are struggling. West Texas is also struggling.
I don’t think it’s hate, more likely frustration and distrust. Do you really believe it will be three weeks? That’s what the powers to be told us in March, and some sectors still have yet to reopen and apparently won’t be any time soon.
3 weeks isn’t that long, assuming it’s only 3 weeks. Here in Connecticut we just got slapped with 2 months of no youth sports at all.
Don’t disrespect Big Gretch like that.
Saving lives does not make one a witch.
Starts Wednesday
Well, you can thank your elected leadership folks.
It’s for our own protection and our governor is trying her best. Not her fault that some people are idiots.
Really amazing.
Football ok but swimming in chlorine must stop
What a witch
High school football has also been paused.
Not in Ohio. We finished last weekend
How about cancel UM football? They are 1-3
No. A cash cow
Hypocrisy. Gonna lose in court
This article is about Michigan, not Ohio. Gretchen Whitmer is the Governor of Michigan, not Ohio. So it’s weird to use the timing of the football season in Ohio as a criticism against the Governor of Michigan.
University of Michigan swimming, presuming they use similar extraordinary protocols as University of Michigan football, will be allowed to continue.
I think the expectation is that the taxpayers don’t want to pay for the protocols that would be necessary for high school sports to continue, and/or they don’t trust high school/club sports to administer those protocols faithfully and with honesty and transparency.
Michigan is still a public institution, correct? The taxpayers are paying for the protocols for the university’s sports to continue…one way or another.
As for honesty and transparency, where is deception more likely to occur – an institution with millions of dollars on the line, including highly paid coaches, trainers,etc., or a high school where most of the coaches are paid nominally to coach a sport? Call me crazy, but I vote for the former.
The silliness of the whole thing is that is stops nothing, just prolongs the misery.
In the case of Michigan athletics, stopping the sports would cost the taxpayers far more money than continuing them and testing. That’s not the case with high school sports.
Michigan Athletics is, in general, self-sustaining, and doesn’t cost the taxpayers money. For the last fiscal year, they had a $1 million budget surplus.
With no football, they were only projecting a $26 million budget deficit; with football back, they could be in the black again this year.
So it’s not about safety, it’s money
What a duplicitous response
First of all, this is my projection, not what the state has said.
In your mind, are safety and money a dichotomy? It must not be, because you’re concerned about the economic impacts of being safe, right?
My suspicion is that money is the secondary driver. If you can afford to play safely, then great! Do it! If you cannot afford to play safely, then you will first-and-foremost be safe.
The state appears to be trying to find compromises. For example, they’ve allowed childcare (daycares) to remain open explicitly so that people who need to work can work.
Doesn’t have to be all-or-nothing. Michigan, like most states, are trying to do better in wave 2 about finding balance between economy… Read more »